The defendants appeal from a judgment awarding the possession of real property to the plaintiff.
This action and a prior one entitled
City of Oakland
v.
Wheeler et al.,
Prior to the institution of either action the defendants were admittedly the owners of so much of the tract as lay above the line of low tide. They held as successors to the Oakland Water Front Company, which had acquired its title from Horace W. Carpentier, who, in turn, deraigned title from the city of Oakland. The history of the legislation, and the subsequent dealings of the city, affecting the waterfront lands is fully set forth in the decision of this court in
City of Oakland
v.
Oakland Water Front Co.,
The earlier case to which we have referred (City of Oakland v. Wheeler) was a suit in eminent domain, by which the city of Oakland sought to condemn so much of the tract occupied by the defendants as lay above the line of “ship channel.” The judgment of condemnation was made December 21, 1911, the damages to be paid defendants being assessed at $211,315.06. A final order of condemnation was made February 10, 1912, and an order letting the municipality into possession on March 9,1912.
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Appeals from the judgment of condemnation and the two orders were taken and were heard in the district court of appeal for the first appellate district, where the judgment and orders were affirmed on August 23, 1917.
(City of Oakland
v.
Wheeler,
The present action was begun on February 23, 1912, after the judgment and the final order of condemnation, and shortly prior to the order letting the city into possession of the condemned area. It is brought to recover possession of the land lying below the line of ship channel. The theory upon which the city went in the litigation was that by the condemnation proceedings it had acquired the right of possession of the land above ship channel theretofore owned by the defendants in fee, and that in the present action it was entitled to recover possession of the land below ship channel, held "by the defendants and used by them for wharfing purposes. The claim was, and is, that the defendants and their predecessors had originally gone into occupancy of the land here involved as tenants of the city of Oakland under a lease which had expired before this suit was commenced. The appellants strongly attack the soundness of this claim, but the conclusions we have reached on other points will dispose of the appeal without the necessity of passing on the question just suggested.
In the condemnation suit, as well as in the present action, the city took the position that the line marking the boundary of the property granted to the city of Oakland by the act of May 4,1852, and, consequently, the southerly boundary of the land owned by the defendants as successors of Carpentier, to whom the city had conveyed, was the line of low tide, as that line existed on the fourth day of May, 1852, the date of the enactment, of the granting statute. In the proceeding in eminent domain the property sought to be acquired was described as bounded on the south by “the line of ordinary low tide of May 4, 1852,” and this description was carried into the judgment and the final order of condemnation. In the present action the plaintiff sought to recover possession of a tract described as bounded on the north by “the line of ordinary low tide of May 4, 1852, ’ ’ and the judgment under review awards to the plaintiff recovery of the possession of a parcel of land so bounded. The boundary of the corporate limits of the town of Oakland and of the lands granted to the town by the state,
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as described by the act of 1852, is the line of “ship channel.” Until the decision of this court in
City of Oakland
v.
Oakland Water Front Co.,
As further support for its construction of the legislative grant, respondent relies upon the decisión of the United States circuit court of appeals in
Western Pacific Ry. Co.
v.
Southern Pacific Co.,
To the suggestion that a boundary shifting with the location of the tide line would be incapable of definite ascertainment, we respond that in our judgment such a line is more readily susceptible of location on the ground than a line not marked by permanent monuments, and to be determined by conditions as they existed many years ago. To fix the latter line, resort must be had to oral testimony which is, in its nature, uncertain, and may >be 'difficult or impossible to obtain. At any rate, the question being one of the construction of a statute of *90 this state, we cannot be bound by the decision of a federal court, however great our respect for that court, when such decision is at variance Avith the views expressed by the highest court of this state.
Nor was anything decided in
City of Oakland
v.
Wheeler,
These views make it unnecessary to consider a number of points argued by counsel.
Whether or not the respondent would be entitled to the benefit of any changes in the low tide line produced by artifi *92 eial structures is a question suggested in the briefs, hut not argued to any extent. We do not find it necessary to decide it here, and mention it merely to avoid the implication that a view either way is involved in what we have said.
The judgment is reversed.
Shaw, J., Wilbur, 'J., Melvin, J., Lennon, J., Lawlor, J., arid Angellotti, C. J., concurred.
Rehearing denied. •.
Shaw, J., Melvin, J., Wilbur, J., and Lennon, 'J., concurred.
